The earliest archeological evidence interpreted by some as suggestive of the emergence of religious ideas dates back several hundred thousand years, to the
Middle and
Lower Paleolithic periods: some archaeologists conclude that the apparently intentional burial of
archaic humans,
Neanderthals and even
Homo naledi as early as 300,000 years ago is proof that religious ideas already existed, but such a connection is entirely conjectural. Other evidence that some infer as indicative of religious ideas includes symbolic artifacts from
Middle Stone Age sites in Africa. However, the interpretation of early Paleolithic artifacts, with regard to how they relate to religious ideas, remains controversial. Archeological evidence from more recent periods is less controversial. Scientists generally interpret a number of artifacts from the
Upper Paleolithic (50,000–13,000 BCE) as representing religious ideas. Examples of Upper Paleolithic remains that some associate with religious beliefs include the
lion man, the
Venus figurines, and the elaborate ritual burial from
Sungir. In the 19th century, researchers proposed various theories regarding the origin of religion, challenging earlier claims of a Christianity-like
urreligion. Early theorists, such as
Edward Burnett Tylor (1832–1917) and
Herbert Spencer (1820–1903), emphasized the concept of
animism, while archaeologist
John Lubbock (1834–1913) used the term "
fetishism". Meanwhile, the religious scholar
Max Müller (1823–1900) theorized that religion began in
hedonism and the folklorist
Wilhelm Mannhardt (1831–1880) suggested that religion began in "naturalism" – by which he meant mythological explanations for natural events. All of these theories have been widely criticized since then; there is no broad consensus regarding the origin of religion.
Pre-pottery Neolithic A (PPNA)
Göbekli Tepe, the oldest potentially religious site yet discovered anywhere includes circles of erected massive T-shaped stone pillars, the world's oldest known
megaliths decorated with
abstract, enigmatic
pictograms and
carved-animal reliefs. The site, near the home place of original wild wheat, was built before the so-called
Neolithic Revolution, i.e., the beginning of
agriculture and
animal husbandry around 9000 BCE. But the construction of Göbekli Tepe implies organization of an advanced order not hitherto associated with
Paleolithic,
PPNA, or
PPNB societies. The site, abandoned around the time the first agricultural societies started, is still being excavated and analyzed, and thus might shed light on the significance it had, if any, for the religions of older, foraging communities, as well as for the general history of religions. The
Pyramid Texts from ancient Egypt, the oldest known
religious texts in the world, date to between 2400 and 2300 BCE. The earliest records of
Indian religion are the
Vedas, composed during the
Vedic Period. Surviving early copies of religious texts include: • The
Upanishads, some of which date to the mid-first millennium BCE. • The
Dead Sea Scrolls, representing fragmentary texts of the Hebrew
Tanakh. • Complete Hebrew texts, also of the
Tanakh, but translated into the
Greek language (
Septuagint 300–200 BCE), were in wide use by the early 1st century CE. • The Zoroastrian
Avesta, from a
Sassanian-era master copy. ==Axial age==